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LCD Soundsystem

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LCD Soundsystem

LCD Soundsystem

This is Happening
Third album proper from James Murphy's LCD Soundsystem, follows 2007's Sounds Of Silver. Musically inspired by late ‘70s David Bowie, This... (Click the album for more)
  • $13.95 CD
  • Vinyl out of stock
LCD Soundsystem

LCD Soundsystem

London Sessions
In the midst of their 2010 world tour, LCD Soundsystem stopped off at Miloco Studios to record their live set. Utilizing a full band with sk... (Click the album for more)
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  • $21.95 Vinyl
LCD Soundsystem

LCD Soundsystem

45:33 Remixes By Prins Thomas/Runaway
This 12-inch is one in a special set of four singles features segments of LCD Soundsystem's 45:33 album lovingly and respectfully reinterpre... (Click the album for more)
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LCD Soundsystem

LCD Soundsystem

LCD Soundsystem
Debut full length from DFA's James Murphy helped reclaim the dance floor and put it back in the hands of the kids. Features the monster "Da... (Click the album for more)
  • Vinyl out of stock
  • CD out of stock

LCD Soundsystem

Sound Of Silver

Compared to the first LCD Soundsystem album, Sound of Silver is less silly, funnier, less messy, sleeker, less rowdy, more fun, less distanced, more touching. It is just as linked to James Murphy's record collection, with traces of post-punk, disco, Krautrock, and singer/songwriter schlubs, but the references are evidently harder to pin down; the number of names dropped in the reviews published before its release must triple the amount mentioned throughout "Losing My Edge." There's even some confusion as to which version of David Bowie is lurking around. One clearly evident aspect of the album is that Murphy has streamlined his sound. All the jagged frays have been removed, replaced by a slightly tidier approach that is more direct and packs more punch. Murphy comes across as a fully naturalized producer of dance music -- especially on "Get Innocuous!" -- as opposed to a product of '90s indie rock who has made a convincing switch-up. And yet, the album's best song is sad, should not be played in any club, and it at least matches the work of any active songwriter who has been praised. "Someone Great," a bittersweet pop song built on swelling synthesizers and a dual vocal-and-glockenspiel melody, could definitely be about a devastating breakup ("To tell the truth I saw it coming/The way you were breathing"), at least until "You're smaller than my wife imagined/Surprised you were human," which could mean the song either took a turn for the absurd or is about the death (and funeral) of a loved one. Either way, it is the most moving song Murphy has made, and it only helps further the notion that he should be considered a great songwriter, not simply a skilled musician with a few studio tricks and the occasional clever quip. The closer, "New York, I Love You But You're Bringing Me Down," seals it: "New York, you're perfect, oh please don't change a thing/Your mild billionaire mayor's now convinced he's a king/And so the boring collect -- I mean all disrespect/In the neighborhood bars I'd once dreamt I would drink."

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